fbpx
Wikipedia

Pittsburgh Maulers (1984)

The Pittsburgh Maulers were a team that competed in the 1984 season of the United States Football League. Their most prominent player was first pick overall in the 1984 USFL Draft, running back Mike Rozier of Nebraska, who won the Heisman Trophy, collegiate football's most prestigious individual award.

Pittsburgh Maulers (1984)
Established April 28, 1983
Folded October 26, 1984[1]
Played in Three Rivers Stadium
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
League/conference affiliations
United States Football League (1984)
  • Eastern Conference (1984)
    • Atlantic Division (1984)
Current uniform
Team colorsPurple, Renaissance Red, Gray, White
       
Personnel
Owner(s)Edward J. DeBartolo, Sr.
General managerGeorge Heddleston
Head coachJoe Pendry (2–8)
Ellis Rainsberger (interim) (1–7)
Hank Bullough (would be 1985 coach)
Team history
  • Pittsburgh Maulers (1984)
Championships
League championships (0)
Conference championships (0)
Division championships (0)
Home stadium(s)

They were owned by shopping mall magnate Edward J. DeBartolo, Sr., the father of Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr., then-owner of the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League and the Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League. The Maulers played at Three Rivers Stadium.

History edit

No one was surprised when two groups filed for a Pittsburgh franchise in the winter of 1983. It did come as a considerable surprise that DeBartolo, Sr. was one of them, given his son's ownership of the 49ers. However, while the other group contented itself with holding a rally to demonstrate support for a potential franchise, DeBartolo stole a march by securing an all-important lease for Three Rivers Stadium. A few days later, DeBartolo's longtime right-hand man, former Steeler Paul Martha, informed the other owners and Commissioner Chet Simmons that his boss was not only applying for a franchise, but already had a lease.

There was some debate over whether to approve DeBartolo's bid, with some fearing that they were effectively allowing an NFL owner into their circle. It was an open secret that Eddie, Sr. and Eddie, Jr. worked closely together.[2] Ultimately, the owners realized that DeBartolo would lend the upstart league instant credibility and unanimously approved his bid, making him the first owner of a USFL expansion team. Unusually, DeBartolo applied for the franchise in his own name, rather than setting up a corporation or partnership. He also paid the full $6.25 million expansion fee up front. A name-the-team contest yielded the nickname "Maulers," after the sledgehammer-wielding workers in steel foundries.

The NFL itself threatened an investigation over a possible Cleveland Spiders-style conflict of interest due to the father owning a USFL team and the son owning an NFL team, an accusation both father and son insisted was not the case.[3] Ultimately, the NFL asked Eddie, Jr. to leave the room during any USFL discussions.[2]

DeBartolo immediately made waves by beginning talks with Dan Marino, a Pittsburgh native and the quarterback for the hometown Pitt Panthers (he ultimately signed with the NFL's Miami Dolphins). Joe Pendry, the offensive coordinator for the 1983 finalist Philadelphia Stars, became head coach.

The Maulers opened their home season with a March 11, 1984[4] sellout crowd at Three Rivers Stadium facing the Birmingham Stallions, a team led by Cliff Stoudt, who had spent much of the previous season as the starter for the Pittsburgh Steelers, and had been Terry Bradshaw's backup for years before then. Fans bombarded Stoudt with snowballs and ice whenever the Stallions entered the red zone. The Maulers lost, 30-18, in what would be the team's only sellout.

The team finished 3–15, tying the Washington Federals for the worst record in the league. However, while undermanned, they were not nearly as bad as their record indicated. They were in part victims of a very tough schedule. They played nine games against playoff teams and caught a lot of the other teams when they were hot—Oklahoma and New Orleans early and San Antonio and Jacksonville late. Seven of their losses were by fewer than 10 points.

The team was built around the idea that Dallas Cowboys longtime third-string QB Glenn Carano would be a strong starter in the USFL. To support Carano, the team had RB Mike Rozier–the second straight Heisman Trophy winner to sign with a USFL team–and WR Greg Anderson, who caught 63 passes. Carano had his moments but he struggled overall, completing only 53.7% of his passes with 13 touchdowns and 19 interceptions. Backup Tom Rozantz was expected to mostly carry a clipboard, but he ended up playing a lot and he struggled as well. However, either would have been a disappointment, as most fans expected the Maulers to pick Steve Young rather than Mike Rozier. Even bringing in former Arizona Wranglers star WR Jackie Flowers did not turn around the offense. The defense, led by CB Jerry Holmes and DE Sam Clancy finished a respectable eighth in points allowed. In spite of this, they were hobbled by a low-octane offense.

In the middle of a 17-7 loss to the Memphis Showboats, DeBartolo told general manager George Heddleston to tell Pendry to yank Carano in favor of backup Tom Rozantz. Pendry refused to do so, even when Carano dislocated his right arm and could not throw without "tremendous pain" shooting through it. A fuming DeBartolo ordered Heddleston and Pendry to meet with him at his office in Youngstown, Ohio the next morning. Pendry refused to come, and quit rather than be fired. Offensive line coach Ellis Rainsberger took over as interim coach for the rest of the season.[5]

They closed the season against Jacksonville in a torrential rainstorm; one sideline was so badly flooded that both teams had to share the other sideline.[5]

Vote for a fall schedule kills franchise edit

Despite losing millions of dollars and only winning three games, the Maulers were competitive in most games. They also attracted 22,858 per game, a respectable figure—at least by USFL standards—for an expansion team. DeBartolo was determined to stick it out, even going as far as hiring Hank Bullough away from the Green Bay Packers to become the new head coach.[6] The fan support in such a strong sports town such as Pittsburgh can be attributed to a combination of factors. At the time the Maulers arrived, the Steelers were in the middle of an on-field decline following their 1970s dominance. The Penguins were all but invisible in the Pittsburgh market (though the team had just drafted Mario Lemieux). The Pittsburgh Pirates were experiencing an on- and off-field collapse that would be topped off by the 1985 Pittsburgh drug trials and the team nearly relocating to Denver.

However, just a few days after Bullough's hiring, the USFL voted to switch to a fall schedule in 1986. DeBartolo was a strong believer in the USFL's original spring football concept, and he knew the Maulers could not hope to go head-to-head against the Steelers. Sharing Three Rivers Stadium would have caused serious logistical problems early in the fall, with the Maulers, Pirates and Steelers fighting for dates. A move to Cleveland, closer to DeBartolo's home in Youngstown, was quickly ruled out; even without the daunting task of going head-to-head with the Cleveland Browns (then a solid playoff team) to consider, similar conflicts with the Cleveland Indians sharing Cleveland Stadium at the time rendered this potential move impractical as well.

As a result, just a week after the vote to move to the fall, DeBartolo decided to fold the team without so much as a press conference. He announced that he intended to merge the Maulers with another team. Initially, he struck a merger agreement with the Stars, who had been forced to move to Baltimore after concluding they could not compete with the NFL's Eagles. However, just months later, at the urging of his wife Marie, DeBartolo sold his stake in the Stars and got out of the league entirely.[2] The league's abandonment of Pittsburgh was later cited as a factor in the USFL failing to secure a large judgment in its antitrust suit against the NFL; although it technically won, the jury only awarded it $3 in damages.

Amidst several USFL teams that were "one-season wonders" as a result of relocating, merging with other teams and/or changing team names (all off-season), the Pittsburgh Maulers have the distinction of being the only USFL team to play with no connections to any other cities or teams, neither before nor after their only season.

1984 Pittsburgh Maulers schedule edit

Week Day Date Opponent Result Record TV Venue Attendance
Preseason
1 Saturday January 28 at Jacksonville Bulls T 0–0 0–0–1 Gator Bowl Stadium 10,000
2 Bye
3 Saturday February 11 vs. Washington Federals W 31–7 1–0–1 Melbourne, Florida 6,000
4 Saturday February 18 vs. Jacksonville Bulls W 13–10 2–0–1 Melbourne, Florida 4,500
Regular Season
1 Sunday February 26 at Oklahoma Outlaws L 3–7 0–1 Skelly Stadium 15,937
2 Saturday March 3 at Michigan Panthers L 24–27 0–2 ESPN Pontiac Silverdome 44,485
3 Sunday March 11 Birmingham Stallions L 18–30 0–3 Three Rivers Stadium 53,771
4 Sunday March 18 at Washington Federals W 16–7 1–3 RFK Stadium 10,121
5 Saturday March 24 Philadelphia Stars L 10–25 1–4 ESPN Three Rivers Stadium 24,341
6 Sunday April 1 Oakland Invaders W 28–14 2–4 Three Rivers Stadium 22,408
7 Sunday April 8 at New Orleans Breakers L 24–27 2–5 ABC Louisiana Superdome 39,315
8 Saturday April 14 Denver Gold L 12–31 2–6 Three Rivers Stadium 16,773
9 Sunday April 22 New Jersey Generals L 10–14 2–7 ABC Three Rivers Stadium 14,418
10 Friday April 27 at Memphis Showboats L 7–17 2–8 Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium 30,640
11 Saturday May 5 at Los Angeles Express L 12–20 2–9 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 16,789
12 Saturday May 12 Houston Gamblers L 26–47 2–10 ESPN Three Rivers Stadium 24,880
13 Monday May 21 at New Jersey Generals L 14–16 2–11 ESPN Giants Stadium 41,212
14 Sunday May 27 Washington Federals W 15–6 3–11 Three Rivers Stadium 15,153
15 Monday June 4 at Philadelphia Stars L 17–23 3–12 ESPN Veterans Stadium 30,102
16 Monday June 11 San Antonio Gunslingers L 3–21 3–13 ESPN Three Rivers Stadium 17,148
17 Saturday June 16 Tampa Bay Bandits L 9–21 3–14 Three Rivers Stadium 16,832
18 Friday June 22 at Jacksonville Bulls L 2–26 3–15 Gator Bowl Stadium 31,843

Sources[7][8][9][10]

Players of note edit

Complete roster edit

1984 Pittsburgh Maulers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

  • 80 Greg Anderson
  • 82 Reggie Butts
  • 89 Johnnie Dirden
  • 85 T. K. Ehlebracht
  • 82 Jimmy Ferranti
  • 84 Jackie Flowers
  • 81 Ricky Martin
  • 89 Sylvester Moy
  • 88 Shawn Potts
  • 81 Jim Taylor

Tight ends

  • 85 Al Kimichik
  • 83 Mark Raugh
  • 87 Mike Shaw
Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Rookies in italics

Duplicate numbers listed due to roster movement during the season
-- = roster number information unavailable

All-USFL players edit

The following Maulers players have been named to All-USFL Teams:

Statistics and records edit

Season-by-season record edit

Note: The Finish, Wins, Losses, and Ties columns list regular season results and exclude any postseason play.

Legend
USFL champions Conference champions Division champions Wild Card berth
Pittsburgh Maulers season-by-season records
Season Team League Conference Division Regular season Postseason results Awards
Finish Wins Losses Ties
1984 1984 USFL Eastern Atlantic T-3rd 3 15 0

Records edit

All-time Maulers leaders
Leader Player Record Years with Maulers
Passing Glenn Carano 2,368 passing yards 1984
Rushing Mike Rozier 792 rushing yards 1984
Receiving Greg Anderson 994 receiving yards 1984
Coaching wins Joe Pendry 2 wins 1984
Sacks Sam Clancy 16.0 sacks 1984
Interceptions 4 players tied 2 interception 1984

References edit

  1. ^ "Maulers Fold". The New York Times. October 26, 1984. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Reeths, Paul (2017). The United States Football League, 1982-1986. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-1476667447.
  3. ^ . sportsillustrated.cnn.com. Archived from the original on 2012-11-02.
  4. ^ [1][dead link]
  5. ^ a b Pearlman, Jeff (2018). Football For A Buck: The Crazy Rise and Crazier Demise of the USFL. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0544454385.
  6. ^ "Times Daily - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  7. ^ "Pittsburgh Maulers, United States Football League". funwhileitlasted.net. 27 February 2011.
  8. ^ statscrew.com 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers Game-by-Game Results Retrieved December 16, 2018
  9. ^ usflsite.com 1984 USFL Season Retrieved December 16, 2018
  10. ^ profootballarchives.com 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers (USFL) Retrieved December 16, 2018
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-08-11. Retrieved 2013-09-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links edit

  • Remember The USFL: Pittsburgh Maulers
  • USFL.info - Pittsburgh Maulers
  • Our Sports Central: Pittsburgh Maulers
  • Steeler Chief: Pittsburgh Maulers

pittsburgh, maulers, 1984, this, article, about, first, edition, usfl, present, usfl, pittsburgh, maulers, 2022, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states, wikipedia, editor, personal, feelings, pre. This article is about the first edition of the USFL For the present day USFL see Pittsburgh Maulers 2022 This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Pittsburgh Maulers were a team that competed in the 1984 season of the United States Football League Their most prominent player was first pick overall in the 1984 USFL Draft running back Mike Rozier of Nebraska who won the Heisman Trophy collegiate football s most prestigious individual award Pittsburgh Maulers 1984 Established April 28 1983Folded October 26 1984 1 Played in Three Rivers Stadiumin Pittsburgh PennsylvaniaLeague conference affiliationsUnited States Football League 1984 Eastern Conference 1984 Atlantic Division 1984 Current uniformTeam colorsPurple Renaissance Red Gray White PersonnelOwner s Edward J DeBartolo Sr General managerGeorge HeddlestonHead coachJoe Pendry 2 8 Ellis Rainsberger interim 1 7 Hank Bullough would be 1985 coach Team historyPittsburgh Maulers 1984 ChampionshipsLeague championships 0 Conference championships 0 Division championships 0 Home stadium s Three Rivers Stadium 1984 They were owned by shopping mall magnate Edward J DeBartolo Sr the father of Edward J DeBartolo Jr then owner of the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League and the Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League The Maulers played at Three Rivers Stadium Contents 1 History 1 1 Vote for a fall schedule kills franchise 1 2 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers schedule 2 Players of note 2 1 Complete roster 2 2 All USFL players 3 Statistics and records 3 1 Season by season record 3 2 Records 4 References 5 External linksHistory editNo one was surprised when two groups filed for a Pittsburgh franchise in the winter of 1983 It did come as a considerable surprise that DeBartolo Sr was one of them given his son s ownership of the 49ers However while the other group contented itself with holding a rally to demonstrate support for a potential franchise DeBartolo stole a march by securing an all important lease for Three Rivers Stadium A few days later DeBartolo s longtime right hand man former Steeler Paul Martha informed the other owners and Commissioner Chet Simmons that his boss was not only applying for a franchise but already had a lease There was some debate over whether to approve DeBartolo s bid with some fearing that they were effectively allowing an NFL owner into their circle It was an open secret that Eddie Sr and Eddie Jr worked closely together 2 Ultimately the owners realized that DeBartolo would lend the upstart league instant credibility and unanimously approved his bid making him the first owner of a USFL expansion team Unusually DeBartolo applied for the franchise in his own name rather than setting up a corporation or partnership He also paid the full 6 25 million expansion fee up front A name the team contest yielded the nickname Maulers after the sledgehammer wielding workers in steel foundries The NFL itself threatened an investigation over a possible Cleveland Spiders style conflict of interest due to the father owning a USFL team and the son owning an NFL team an accusation both father and son insisted was not the case 3 Ultimately the NFL asked Eddie Jr to leave the room during any USFL discussions 2 DeBartolo immediately made waves by beginning talks with Dan Marino a Pittsburgh native and the quarterback for the hometown Pitt Panthers he ultimately signed with the NFL s Miami Dolphins Joe Pendry the offensive coordinator for the 1983 finalist Philadelphia Stars became head coach The Maulers opened their home season with a March 11 1984 4 sellout crowd at Three Rivers Stadium facing the Birmingham Stallions a team led by Cliff Stoudt who had spent much of the previous season as the starter for the Pittsburgh Steelers and had been Terry Bradshaw s backup for years before then Fans bombarded Stoudt with snowballs and ice whenever the Stallions entered the red zone The Maulers lost 30 18 in what would be the team s only sellout The team finished 3 15 tying the Washington Federals for the worst record in the league However while undermanned they were not nearly as bad as their record indicated They were in part victims of a very tough schedule They played nine games against playoff teams and caught a lot of the other teams when they were hot Oklahoma and New Orleans early and San Antonio and Jacksonville late Seven of their losses were by fewer than 10 points The team was built around the idea that Dallas Cowboys longtime third string QB Glenn Carano would be a strong starter in the USFL To support Carano the team had RB Mike Rozier the second straight Heisman Trophy winner to sign with a USFL team and WR Greg Anderson who caught 63 passes Carano had his moments but he struggled overall completing only 53 7 of his passes with 13 touchdowns and 19 interceptions Backup Tom Rozantz was expected to mostly carry a clipboard but he ended up playing a lot and he struggled as well However either would have been a disappointment as most fans expected the Maulers to pick Steve Young rather than Mike Rozier Even bringing in former Arizona Wranglers star WR Jackie Flowers did not turn around the offense The defense led by CB Jerry Holmes and DE Sam Clancy finished a respectable eighth in points allowed In spite of this they were hobbled by a low octane offense In the middle of a 17 7 loss to the Memphis Showboats DeBartolo told general manager George Heddleston to tell Pendry to yank Carano in favor of backup Tom Rozantz Pendry refused to do so even when Carano dislocated his right arm and could not throw without tremendous pain shooting through it A fuming DeBartolo ordered Heddleston and Pendry to meet with him at his office in Youngstown Ohio the next morning Pendry refused to come and quit rather than be fired Offensive line coach Ellis Rainsberger took over as interim coach for the rest of the season 5 They closed the season against Jacksonville in a torrential rainstorm one sideline was so badly flooded that both teams had to share the other sideline 5 Vote for a fall schedule kills franchise edit Despite losing millions of dollars and only winning three games the Maulers were competitive in most games They also attracted 22 858 per game a respectable figure at least by USFL standards for an expansion team DeBartolo was determined to stick it out even going as far as hiring Hank Bullough away from the Green Bay Packers to become the new head coach 6 The fan support in such a strong sports town such as Pittsburgh can be attributed to a combination of factors At the time the Maulers arrived the Steelers were in the middle of an on field decline following their 1970s dominance The Penguins were all but invisible in the Pittsburgh market though the team had just drafted Mario Lemieux The Pittsburgh Pirates were experiencing an on and off field collapse that would be topped off by the 1985 Pittsburgh drug trials and the team nearly relocating to Denver However just a few days after Bullough s hiring the USFL voted to switch to a fall schedule in 1986 DeBartolo was a strong believer in the USFL s original spring football concept and he knew the Maulers could not hope to go head to head against the Steelers Sharing Three Rivers Stadium would have caused serious logistical problems early in the fall with the Maulers Pirates and Steelers fighting for dates A move to Cleveland closer to DeBartolo s home in Youngstown was quickly ruled out even without the daunting task of going head to head with the Cleveland Browns then a solid playoff team to consider similar conflicts with the Cleveland Indians sharing Cleveland Stadium at the time rendered this potential move impractical as well As a result just a week after the vote to move to the fall DeBartolo decided to fold the team without so much as a press conference He announced that he intended to merge the Maulers with another team Initially he struck a merger agreement with the Stars who had been forced to move to Baltimore after concluding they could not compete with the NFL s Eagles However just months later at the urging of his wife Marie DeBartolo sold his stake in the Stars and got out of the league entirely 2 The league s abandonment of Pittsburgh was later cited as a factor in the USFL failing to secure a large judgment in its antitrust suit against the NFL although it technically won the jury only awarded it 3 in damages Amidst several USFL teams that were one season wonders as a result of relocating merging with other teams and or changing team names all off season the Pittsburgh Maulers have the distinction of being the only USFL team to play with no connections to any other cities or teams neither before nor after their only season 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers schedule edit Week Day Date Opponent Result Record TV Venue AttendancePreseason1 Saturday January 28 at Jacksonville Bulls T 0 0 0 0 1 Gator Bowl Stadium 10 0002 Bye3 Saturday February 11 vs Washington Federals W 31 7 1 0 1 Melbourne Florida 6 0004 Saturday February 18 vs Jacksonville Bulls W 13 10 2 0 1 Melbourne Florida 4 500Regular Season1 Sunday February 26 at Oklahoma Outlaws L 3 7 0 1 Skelly Stadium 15 9372 Saturday March 3 at Michigan Panthers L 24 27 0 2 ESPN Pontiac Silverdome 44 4853 Sunday March 11 Birmingham Stallions L 18 30 0 3 Three Rivers Stadium 53 7714 Sunday March 18 at Washington Federals W 16 7 1 3 RFK Stadium 10 1215 Saturday March 24 Philadelphia Stars L 10 25 1 4 ESPN Three Rivers Stadium 24 3416 Sunday April 1 Oakland Invaders W 28 14 2 4 Three Rivers Stadium 22 4087 Sunday April 8 at New Orleans Breakers L 24 27 2 5 ABC Louisiana Superdome 39 3158 Saturday April 14 Denver Gold L 12 31 2 6 Three Rivers Stadium 16 7739 Sunday April 22 New Jersey Generals L 10 14 2 7 ABC Three Rivers Stadium 14 41810 Friday April 27 at Memphis Showboats L 7 17 2 8 Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium 30 64011 Saturday May 5 at Los Angeles Express L 12 20 2 9 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 16 78912 Saturday May 12 Houston Gamblers L 26 47 2 10 ESPN Three Rivers Stadium 24 88013 Monday May 21 at New Jersey Generals L 14 16 2 11 ESPN Giants Stadium 41 21214 Sunday May 27 Washington Federals W 15 6 3 11 Three Rivers Stadium 15 15315 Monday June 4 at Philadelphia Stars L 17 23 3 12 ESPN Veterans Stadium 30 10216 Monday June 11 San Antonio Gunslingers L 3 21 3 13 ESPN Three Rivers Stadium 17 14817 Saturday June 16 Tampa Bay Bandits L 9 21 3 14 Three Rivers Stadium 16 83218 Friday June 22 at Jacksonville Bulls L 2 26 3 15 Gator Bowl Stadium 31 843Sources 7 8 9 10 Players of note editComplete roster edit 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers final roster Quarterbacks 11 Dave Boisture 18 Glenn Carano 14 Tom RozantzRunning backs 31 Ira Albright 44 Joel Coles FB 46 Walt Easley FB 43 Tony Ellis FB 20 Walter Holman 48 Dennis Johnson FB 32 Amos Lawrence 22 William Miller 21 Hollis Payton 30 Mike Rozier 34 George Works FBWide receivers 80 Greg Anderson 82 Reggie Butts 89 Johnnie Dirden 85 T K Ehlebracht 82 Jimmy Ferranti 84 Jackie Flowers 81 Ricky Martin 89 Sylvester Moy 88 Shawn Potts 81 Jim TaylorTight ends 85 Al Kimichik 83 Mark Raugh 87 Mike Shaw Offensive linemen 65 Scott Burris C G 59 Bruce Byrom C LS 69 Don Corbin G 55 Chuck Correal C 72 Dan Doubiago T 70 Claybon Fields T 66 Ron Hausauer G 61 Donnie Hickman T G 75 Jim Lohmann G 64 Joe Lukens G 76 Don Maggs T 74 Todd Thomas T 58 Mark Udinski C LS 58 Jeff Harper C LSDefensive linemen 94 James Black DE 77 Sam Clancy DE 95 Ken Dombrowski DE 97 David Graham DE 93 Ike Griffin DE 99 Doug Hollie DE 92 Ed McAleney DT 78 Archie Reese DT 91 Mike Rustmeyer DT 92 Laval Short DT 90 Troy Thomas DT Linebackers 50 Earnest Adams 54 Ron Crosby 56 Ron Freeman 57 Bruce Huther 51 Howard McAdoo 56 Mike McKibben 58 Dan Skutack 52 Craig WallsDefensive backs 25 Less Browne FS 41 Jeff Delaney SS 27 Larry Friday SS 22 Derrick Goddard SS 26 Mark Harper CB 25 Troy Hill CB 47 Jerry Holmes CB 29 Jesse Johnson SS 24 David Langlois FS 23 Jim Perryman FS 29 Dan Short SS 40 Sam Sopp SS 28 Mickey Sutton CB 21 Billy Yancy CBSpecial teams 5 Mickey Barilla K 8 Tony Lee K 1 Eric Schubert K 7 Larry Swider P Rookies in italicsDuplicate numbers listed due to roster movement during the season roster number information unavailable All USFL players edit The following Maulers players have been named to All USFL Teams CB Jerry Holmes 11 Statistics and records editSeason by season record edit Note The Finish Wins Losses and Ties columns list regular season results and exclude any postseason play Legend USFL champions Conference champions Division champions Wild Card berthPittsburgh Maulers season by season records Season Team League Conference Division Regular season Postseason results AwardsFinish Wins Losses Ties1984 1984 USFL Eastern Atlantic T 3rd 3 15 0 Records edit All time Maulers leadersLeader Player Record Years with MaulersPassing Glenn Carano 2 368 passing yards 1984Rushing Mike Rozier 792 rushing yards 1984Receiving Greg Anderson 994 receiving yards 1984Coaching wins Joe Pendry 2 wins 1984Sacks Sam Clancy 16 0 sacks 1984Interceptions 4 players tied 2 interception 1984References edit Maulers Fold The New York Times October 26 1984 Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b c Reeths Paul 2017 The United States Football League 1982 1986 McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 1476667447 The strike is history but for Pete Rozelle the headaches 09 01 83 SI Vault sportsillustrated cnn com Archived from the original on 2012 11 02 1 dead link a b Pearlman Jeff 2018 Football For A Buck The Crazy Rise and Crazier Demise of the USFL Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0544454385 Times Daily Google News Archive Search news google com Pittsburgh Maulers United States Football League funwhileitlasted net 27 February 2011 statscrew com 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers Game by Game Results Retrieved December 16 2018 usflsite com 1984 USFL Season Retrieved December 16 2018 profootballarchives com 1984 Pittsburgh Maulers USFL Retrieved December 16 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2006 08 11 Retrieved 2013 09 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link External links editRemember The USFL Pittsburgh Maulers USFL info Pittsburgh Maulers Our Sports Central Pittsburgh Maulers Steeler Chief Pittsburgh Maulers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pittsburgh Maulers 1984 amp oldid 1176724812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.